Not content with letting half a day’s worth of empty words
fly across the floor of the Texas state senate, Wendy Davis responded to a critique
from Gov. Rick Perry by going into a
snit that showed as little substance as anything that’s ever been harrumphed in
the halls of Congress.

Perry had observed that Davis was “the daughter of a single
woman” and “she was a teenage mother herself.”He added, “It’s just unfortunate that she hasn’t learned from her own
example, that every life must be given a chance to realize its full potential
and that every life matters.”

Sen. Davis responded, “Today, Gov. Perry shamefully attacked
me and my family.”At the risk of using
one of the trillions of words that feminists have deemed offensive, this
reaction of hers is hysterical.The bill
would have prohibited abortions beyond 20 weeks, and imposed new health and
safety regulations on abortion clinics.The only thing Perry said that was critical was
that he thinks Davis is wrong on this issue.If that’s what she calls a shameful attack, then she’s in the wrong line
of work.

“Rick Perry’s statement is without dignity and tarnishes the
high office he holds,” she continued.“They are small words that reflect a dark and negative point of
view.”How twisted must one’s mind be to
perceive anything Perry said as dark and negative?“Every life must be given a chance?”The fiend!

If Davis really cared about dignity, she’d be ashamed to
associate with Planned Parenthood.You
know, those purveyors o’ dignity who hand out condoms disguised as smiley-faced
lollipops, distribute pro-abortion Christmas cards, and put on parades
featuring a mascot named Joe Sperm.That
organization sent a mob of activists to the Texas senate chamber to disrupt the
proceedings.Because they prevented a
vote from taking place until after the midnight deadline had passed, Gov. Perry
has ordered the legislature back for a special session to take up the bill
again.What dignified tactic will Davis
and friends use this time, a food fight?

Davis eventually had to yield the floor, but that doesn’t
mean she stopped filibustering.When
Perry tried to resume a discussion of the issue at hand, she shut down the
debate with another onslaught of inanity.Then again, what else could she do, seriously make the argument that not
every life matters?No, her cause is better
served by mischaracterizing Perry’s words to make his “attack” the issue,
instead of the horrifying truths about abortion and its practitioners.

This
assault on Perry’s character is a tactic right out of the pro-abortion
handbook.When confronted with reality,
attack the messenger.Dismiss your
adversary’s argument because he’s a man, or because she’s a Christian, or
because nobody who hasn’t shared your experiences is deserving of an
opinion.Declare all accurate
terminology to be extreme and hateful, and start spouting geysers of euphemism
instead. Take umbrage.Get shrill.Get angry.Get rude.Get silly.Lie.Do whatever is necessary to divert the discussion away from the killing
of innocent unborn children.

As one would expect, Planned Parenthood president Cecile
Richards is an old pro at this.“Women
are perfectly capable of deciding whether to choose adoption, end a pregnancy
or raise a child,” she said, “and they don’t need Rick Perry’s help making that
decision.”These perfectly capable women
presumably do need Planned Parenthood’s help, however, and Richards’
“counselors” are not going to advise them that they may choose adoption or
raising a child.They are only going to
advise them to take the second option, that Richards is afraid to mention.

An abortion is not merely the end of a pregnancy.All pregnancies end, most of them with mother
and child both returning home alive.Richards might as well have said that women are perfectly capable of
deciding whether to end their marriages.Nobody would ever suspect that what she meant was that they ought to be
free to kill their husbands.

In the legislature, a filibuster is a legitimate procedural
maneuver, to be used when you can’t win the debate because you just haven’t got
the votes.The reason for the
never-ending filibuster employed by abortion advocates throughout the rest of
society is not so innocent.Their
efforts to shut down the larger public debate are driven by the realization
that any forthright discussion of the issue is detrimental to their cause.

Or, to put it into what Davis might describe as “small
words,” they know they’re wrong.